3- Do a health fast or detoxification program. Bernard Jensen, in his book The Guide to Better Colon Care, states that clogged and toxic laden intestines can store toxic feelings and that the liver can also store many negative emotions.
The Chinese use the herb buplerum to release emotional toxins as well as physical ones from the liver. Bernard Jensen finds that a physical detoxification often goes hand-in-hand with an emotional detoxification as a person undergoing a cleansing program will often emerge better able to deal with their relationships and life.
There are many cleanses available in books or from natural therapists. A cleanse can last anywhere from one to twenty-one days.
4- Exercise is one of the most popular anti-depressants on the market.
5- Evaluate your environment. If your depression is effected by allergies, lack of sunlight, or other environmental factors, you need to work on eliminating these problems.
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It is recommended to work and live in spaces that provide adequate sunlight and exposure to nature (through indoor plants) as well as to get at least eight hours of sleep a night.
Activities such as nature hiking and gardening are very anti-depressant. We should seek out more sun in the winter months as seasonal affective disorder (SAD) can afflict us in the dark months of the year and cause or mimic depression.
6- Explore how your “type” deals with depression to give you an idea about how to proceed.
7- Evaluate your diet: B6 (found in leafy greens, fish, poultry, and whole grains) helps elevate serotonin levels. Beans and greens are highest in B6, and a half-cup of chickpeas provides one third of its USRDA.
Selenium is provided amply in fish like tuna. Sources of B-vitamins and folic acid include egg yolks, legumes, whole grains, yogurt, clams, kidney, liver, seafood, vegetables, Brewer’s yeast (non-alcoholic beer has this), mackerel, clams, and green leafy vegetables.
Herbs like alfalfa, catnip, chamomile, ginseng, fennel seeds, nettles, oat straw and peppermint are high in B vitamins. White flour depletes B vitamins. Whatever sources you use for your cure, be sure to take any herbs or supplements for at least six weeks before deciding that they aren’t “working.”
Many times, with chronic conditions, an herb will work so slowly you will not notice its effects. Do a “check in” now and then; in four to six weeks, you should see a difference.
8- Work on the spiritual aspect of your depression. Just as with vitamins and herbs, spiritual cures may take time to heal. Many Muslim scholars have given us tips on how to deal with depression and guidelines on how we can renew our spiritual life.
Prophetic Advices
The Medicine of the Prophet recommends (and explains) these steps for those needing a spiritual cure for depression:
- Acknowledge that God is free from injustice and that He would not cause any hardships without a reason.
- Confess that any imperfection and failure are one’s own. Putting the blame on others is worthless. “Everything good that happens to you (O Man) is from God; everything bad that happens to you is from your own actions” (Surat An-Nisa 4:79).
- Solicit God’s help through prayer and supplication. Rather than asking, “Remove me from this despair (as if you are a victim), instead ask, “Help me find the source of this despair so it can be removed and I may be a better person.” Ibn Abass narrated that God’s messenger said, “When one is overwhelmed with worries or dispiritedness, one should oft-recite: There is no will or power except Allah.“
- Confirm your dependence on Allah and that you move according to divine plan. “And if God touches thee with affliction, none can remove it but He: if He touches thee with happiness, He has power over all things” (Surat Al-An’am 6:17).
- Strive to live according to the Qur’an and Hadith every moment of every day – not just during in prayers or while in the mosque.
- Ask forgiveness for your sins and repent your wrongdoing. A Hadith says to recite, “Lord, I seek refuge in You from distress and cowardice. I seek refuge from weakness and procrastination, from stinginess and cowardice. I seek refuge in You from indebtedness and from subjugation to people’s inequity.“
References:
- Al-Akili, Imam Muhammad (Translator). Medicine of the Prophet.
- Gottlieb, Bill. New Choices in Natural Healing.
- Murray , Michael ND and Joseph Pizzorno, ND. Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine
- Prevention Magazine. New Foods for Healing.
- Wilen, Joan and Lydia. Folk Remedies that Work.
- Wormwood, Valerie Ann. The Fragrant Minds.
This article is from our archive, originally published on an earlier date, and is now highlighted for its importance
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